Adjective
servile (comparative more servile, superlative most servile)
- Excessively eager to please; obsequious.
2021, Ed Vulliamy, The Guardian:British “subjects” (not citizens, note) are just that: gleefully servile to the monarchy’s institutionalised inequality...
- Slavish or submissive.
- Synonym: abject
- Antonyms: arrogant, authoritarian
servile flattery servile obedience
- Of or pertaining to a slave.
c. 1699 – 1703, Alexander Pope, “The First Book of Statius His Thebais”, in The Works of Mr. Alexander Pope, volume I, London: […] W[illiam] Bowyer, for Bernard Lintot, […], published 1717, →OCLC:Even fortune rules no more, O servile land!
- (grammar) Not belonging to the original root.
a servile letter
- (grammar) Not sounded, but serving to lengthen the preceding vowel, like the e in tune.
Translations
of or pertaining to a slave
slavish or submissive
- Armenian:
- Old Armenian: ցած (cʻac)
- Bulgarian: сервилен (bg) (servilen), раболепен (bg) (rabolepen)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 低三下四 (zh) (dīsānxiàsì)
- Finnish: alamainen (fi), orjallinen (fi), orjamainen (fi)
- Galician: servil m or f
- German: sklavisch, unterwürfig, servil (de), hündisch
- Greek: δουλικός (el) (doulikós)
- Irish: moghach, uiríseal
- Italian: servile (it), adulatore (it) m, leccapiedi (it)
- Japanese: 卑屈な (ja) (hikutsu na)
- Latin: humilis, obnoxius, vernīlis
- Middle English: serviable, servisable
- Plautdietsch: dommbleed
- Polish: lokajski (pl), niewolniczy (pl), uniżony
- Portuguese: servil (pt)
- Russian: подобостра́стный (ru) (podobostrástnyj), раболе́пный (ru) (rabolépnyj), холо́пский (ru) (xolópskij)
- Spanish: servil (es)
- Swedish: servil (sv), devot (sv), fjäskig (sv), underdånig (sv)
|